Landscape, Nature And Travel Photography

Photography By Jim M. Goldstein

Kicking Off: Friday Freebie iPad Wallpaper

This is the kick off post to a new experiment… Friday Freebie.
Friday Freebie posts will feature an image to liven up your iPad display with images from my travels… all for free.

This particular photo was taken in Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming. To add a little playfulness to the scene I decided to experiment with a Canon 15mm fisheye lens.  The effect highlighted the cloudy sky over the towering Grand Tetons versus the ever dominant Grand Teton mountains. If you’re fond of Grand Teton landscape photos be sure to check out my Grand Teton National Park gallery.

Before you run off to start your weekend click the iPad above or here to download your new iPad wallpaper. Have a great weekend!

Note: This image is distributed for personal use only and all rights are reserved. If interested in using this photograph commercially please contact me.

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January eBooks of Note

This month some great eBooks have been released by Digital Photography School, Craft & Vision, and Enzo dal Verme. Each address a different topic and are great resources no matter what your level of experience or expertise. January’s eBook releases include:

Nuts and Bolts and Shots – Tools and Techniques for Creative Photography
by Neil Creek and Digital Photography School – $14.99
This eBook is a follow up to Photo Nuts and Bolts – Know Your Camera and Take Better Photos and rather than focusing on your camera gear it provides great insight to taking better photos through technique. There really isn’t a stone left unturned by author and photographer Neil Creek. This book is great if you’re looking to improve your photography as a beginner or intermediate.

Craft &Vision – Winter in the Canadian Rockies
by Darwin Wiggett and Craft & Visiion -$5
Darwin Wiggett is one of the most knowledgeable landscape photographers and a subject of a past EXIF and Beyond podcast. Highlighting over 40 photos from the Canadian Rockies this eBook is a real treat for the eyes. The 2nd half of the book discusses techniques to capture amazing winter photography and highlights details to each featured photograph in the first half of the book.
Note: Get 20% off with the code: ROCKIES20

How to Shoot a Reportage – The Manual
by Enzo dal Verme – €4.99
This is one of the most complete walk books I’ve seen on how to shoot reportage. Very thorough in its content it details logistics, technique and information only a seasoned professional would know. Well worth a read and an eye opener no matter what your photographic interest. Much of the knowledge provided is something that can be applied to any specialty and might just change how you work through your next shoot.
Note: Get 20% off with the code: JGOLD20, good for 1 week

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Land’s End Sunset

There is no canvas more beautiful than that of the ocean at sunset or sunrise. To the untrained eye it may all seem to be the same, but upon closer examination no one view is ever the same. I consider myself lucky in that every evening, barring the presence of fog, I’m treated to a view of a new sunset.

Land's End Sunset - San Francisco, California - Landscape Photography by Jim M. Goldstein

Land's End Sunset - San Francisco, California

While the view from home is nice, it’s never as nice as the cliffside view from Lands End here in San Francisco. In this photo a bank of fog burned off in the waning minutes of light. The remaining hints of fog turned purple framing golden lit surf swirling around coastal rock formations. Definitely a view worth waiting for before hiking back to my car in the dark.

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11 Reasons ASMP Strictly Business 3 Should Be In Your Future

Strictly Business is an event put on by the American Society of Media Photographers (ASMP) and is one of the best resources I’ve found to learn best practices and critical business skills every professional photographer should employ to excel in the business of photography. The last time I attended ASMP’s Strictly Business event I wrote up a quick review with in a few hours of the close of the event. Back then, 3 years ago, blogging and social media were not yet on the radar of ASMP and I think I took the organizers of the event by surprise. Now ASMP is running their own blog, fittingly named Strictly Business, and extending the value of the Strictly Business conference year round with insightful posts to help photographers succeed. This year ASMP is holding Strictly Business 3 in three cities: Los Angeles, Philadelphia and Chicago and it is open to everyone (ASMP members and non-members). That being said I wanted to share with you, a twist on the traditional review, a list of 11 reasons ASMP Strictly Business 3 should be in your future:

11 Reasons ASMP Strictly Business 3 Should Be In Your Future

  1. You’ll meet friendly open professional photographers who want you to succeed
  2. Everyone is approachable. Everyone!
  3. You’ll learn best practices on negotiation, estimating, licensing, copyright, web & traditional marketing, still & video production, portfolio building, etc. from expert organizers/mentors
  4. You’ll have the opportunity to learn something relevant to every niche of professional photography
  5. You’ll learn about tactics that work not just from organizers/mentors, but also from your peers in attendance
  6. You’ll network and build a circle of peers who are serious about succeeding
  7. Perhaps most importantly you’ll learn what mistakes everyone makes and how to avoid making more
  8. It will take you out of your comfort zone
  9. You will leave wiser than when arrived
  10. It will be your wake up call on how to be a professional photographer whether its new to you, you’re in a slump or you need a refresher.
  11. You will leave motivated

Lastly I want to thank ASMP for their generous invitation to take part in their New Business Models discussion panel organized by Shannon Fagan. I had a great time sharing my ideas, hopes and concerns and most of all receiving feedback from numerous photographers whom I hold in high esteem. I had a great time learning, sharing and meeting others.   Once again Strictly Business turned out to be an incredibly valuable experience.

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Back to Los Angeles, ASMP Strictly Business 3

It’s hard to believe but it has been 3 years since I was in Los Angeles for ASMP’s Strictly Business 2 event as an attendee absorbing as much as I could about professional photography best business practices. 3 years later I’m returning to LA for ASMP’s Strictly Business 3 event as a guest panelist on new business models. If you’re in the area this weekend and serious about learning more about pursuing photography as a business this is the event to attend. You don’t have to be an ASMP member and if you’re not in Southern California this weekend fear not, this event is making a stop in Chicago and Philadelphia. Here is the registration page for ASMP Strictly Business 3 in LA, Chicago and Philadelphia. See you there!

Los Angeles Skyline & Traffic At Sunrise

Los Angeles Skyline & Traffic At Sunrise

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Best Photos of 2010 by JMG-Galleries Blog Readers

Mavericks Surf photo 2010 by Jim M. Goldstein - JMG-Galleries.com

This year we had an amazing turn out for the Best Photos of 2010 blog project with 160 entries, topping the results for best photos of 2009, best photos of 2008 and best photos of 2007! Participants spanned a spectrum of skill levels from hobbyists to professionals and covered a wide variety of genres including landscape, macro, nature, photojournalism, portraiture, event, wildlife, fine art photography and more. There are likely many names you’ll recognize below and many others you won’t. I highly recommend visiting each entry as I have. Even after 4 years of running this blog project I’m blown away by the talent of those that take part. It is truly inspirational to see so much creativity and beauty. If your curious to see photos I particularly enjoyed look out for the entries with *** next to them.

Special Thanks: Win A $50 Gift BorrowLenses Certificate
This year to say thanks to all those who participated I’ve lined up something special with Borrowlenses.com who is making available (5) five $50 gift certificates to be given away. There are 3 ways to enter with a maximum of 3 entries:

  1. Post this years results, found below the section break, on your blog. Once you’ve done so add a quick comment here with a link to your post.
  2. a) Go to the BorrowLenses.com fan page, become a fan (like them).
    b) Share the results on Facebook by updating your status as follows:
    Best Photos of 2010 by @JMG-Galleries Blog Reader’s http://now-go.to/gjvcAE – 160+ links of great photos via @jimgoldstein and @borrowlenses.
  3. Share the results on Twitter with the following tweet sans quotes “Best Photos of 2010 by JMG-Galleires Blog Reader’s http://now-go.to/gjvcAE – 160 links of great photos #JMGblog2010 via @jimgoldstein

Also be sure to take part in submitting and reviewing  photographs through out the year in the JMG-Galleries Flickr group and feel free to introduce yourself there.

——-

Best Photos of 2010 blog project Results
via JMG-Galleries and Borrowlenses.com Lens Rentals

  1. Best Photos of 2010 by Jim M. Goldstein – JMG-Galleries
  2. Best Photos of 2010 by Matthias Wassermann – Mawpix.com
  3. Exploring Light -Top Photos 2010 – Chris Moore
  4. My Top Ten Photos for 2010 – Tom Varden
  5. My Top Ten Photos of 2010 | Craig’s Musings – Craig Vitter
  6. Top 10 Photos for 2010 | Dobson Central – Ken Dobson
  7. Best Photos of 2010 – Carol Bauer
  8. My Best photos from 2010 – Janis Janums
  9. My Best Photos of 2010 – David Taylor | SixtyOneNorth.com
  10. 2010 – Year In Review – Jon McCormack Photography – Jon McCormack
  11. S Zacharias: Best of 2010 – Stephen Zacharias
  12. 2010 Photos – David Hernandez
  13. Iceman Photography – Top 10 in 2010
  14. Best of 2010 – Dave Wilson
  15. Skolai Images – Bears of 2010 – Carl Donohue
  16. My Best Photos From 2010 – Art Kuntz
  17. 2010 in Review – Jay Goodrich
  18. My Favourite Images of 2010 – Sven Seebeck ***
  19. Lunchisoptional: Favorites of Year: 2010 Edition — Ken Trout
  20. My ten favorite photos of 2010 – Stefan Bäurle
  21. Top 10 of 2010 – Behind The Clicks – Mohammad Noman
  22. Top Ten Photos Of 2010 – Jed Link
  23. 2010 in Review – kRiZ cPEc Photo Blog
  24. Chuqui.com- Best Photos 2010 – Chuq Von Rospach
  25. My Favorite Photos of 2010 – Ed Rosack
  26. 2010 Favorites – Pat Ulrich | Pat Ulrich Photography ***
  27. Favorites of 2010 – Kevin Moore
  28. Top 10 of 2010 from BlazingB Photography – Bill Pennington ***
  29. My Favorite Photos of 2010 – Mike Criss ***
  30. My faves from 2010 – Matt Smith
  31. My favourite shots of 2010 – Catalin Marin | Momentary Awe ***
  32. 2010 a Year in Review, My Top 10 Memorable/Favorite shots – Mike Criswell
  33. Craig Ferguson Images – A Year In Photos – Craig Ferguson
  34. Top 50 Images from 2010 and Goal Setting – Mike Cavaroc
  35. Jim’s Photography – Jim Wheeler
  36. Sharpimage.net – The best of 2010 – David Sharp
  37. StephenWeaver Photography/Earth Systems Imaging-Stephen G. Weaver
  38. Best of 2010 – Changing Perspectives – Jenni Brehm
  39. katzekotz.de – best of 2010 – Thomas Kneppeck
  40. 2010 Favorite Images – Alpenglow Images – Greg Russell
  41. Best Images of 2010 – Peter Cox Photography – Peter Cox
  42. Best of 2010| Simon Says – Simon Ponder
  43. My Favorites Shots of 2010 – Fine Art Prints – Jeff Colburn
  44. Mountain and Climbing Photography – Alexandre Buisse
  45. Siam In Contrast 2010 – Adrian Young
  46. Olivier Du Tré | 2010 in review (black and white) | 2010 in review (colour)– Olivier Du Tré
  47. John Dunne Photography | My Top 10 Favourite Images of 2010 – John Dunne
  48. Best of 2010 Flickr Set – Tony Rath
  49. Top 10 from 2010 – Behind-the-lens-lukey – Luke Weymark
  50. Evan Gearing Photography’s Top 10 of 2010 – Evan Gearing
  51. 2010 Photos in Review: Water – Rebecca R Jackrel ***
  52. Justin Korn [dot] com – Best of 2010 – Justin Korn
  53. My Best Photos of 2010: Learning and Growing> – D. Travis North
  54. Uncommon Depth – Roberta Murray
  55. Organic Light Photography Best of 2010 – Youssef Ismail / Organic Light Photography
  56. The Best of 2010 – blackandwhite.ie – Neil McShane
  57. My Best of 2010 – Larry Rosenstein
  58. Will Wohler Photography: 2010 A Year in Review – Will Wohler
  59. digitizedchaos – best of 2010 – rian castillo
  60. My Top 10 from 2010 – Chaz Curry Photography ***
  61. My best underwater photos 2010 – Suzy Walker ***
  62. Favorite Photographs From 2010 – Fine Art Landscape Photography of Seung Kye Lee ***
  63. Best photos from 2010 – Amanda Herbert
  64. Wrapping Up 2010: My Favorite Photographs – Ivan Makarov Photography
  65. Graf Nature Photography | Reflections on 2010 photographs – MARK GRAF
  66. VACANT SHOP IN DOWNTOWN SANTA BARBARA – G. Kaltenbrun
  67. Pat O’Brien Photography – A Look Back at 2010 – Pat O’Brien
  68. G Dan Mitchell – 2010 Favorites – G Dan Mitchell ***
  69. Favorite Photo of 2010 – Naturalvision-photo.com –Derek Griggs
  70. Crest, Cliff & Canyon – Jackson Frishman
  71. 2010 In Review - Photoimagery.net – Peter McCabe ***
  72. Favorite Photos from 2010 – In the Field Photo Blog – Richard Wong ***
  73. Year in Review Best Photos of 2010 – Matt Graham Photo Blog – Matt Graham
  74. Elizabeth Brown Photography PhotoBlog: Ten Favorite Photos of 2010 – Elizabeth Brown
  75. My Top Photos of 2010 – Jonesblog – Bryan William Jones
  76. latoga photograph: My Favorite Photos of 2010 – Greg A. Lato
  77. Best of 2010 Images – Rob Tilley
  78. Living Wilderness: 12 Best from 2010 – Kevin Ebi ***
  79. Highlights of 2010 - TO KNOW MORE WEB JOURNAL – KENT MEARIG ***
  80. My Best Photos of 2010 – Michael Russell | Michael Russell Photography
  81. Best Photographs of 2010 – Chuck Goolsbee
  82. Favourite Photos from 2010 – Tim Smalley
  83. My Best 10 Photos 2010 – A Reconnection to Nature – Mark Fenwick
  84. Best of 2010 – Quotidian Photography – Jessica Sweeney
  85. My Top Images of 2010 – ANDREW KEE
  86. A Photo A Day… Done! – WelliverPhotography – Beth Welliver
  87. Batsto Village – Louis Dallara Photo Blog – Louis Dallara
  88. Best 10 of 2010 – John Wall’s Natural California ***
  89. 10 from 2010 on the Ann-alog – Ann Torrence ***
  90. Favorite Photos from 2010 – My Photo Blog – Ron Niebrugge ***
  91. My favorite photos 2010 on Flickr – Markus Heinisch ***
  92. My best photos of 2010 – Mike Hellers
  93. Dave Reichert’s Best Of 2010 – Dave Reichert
  94. Photographs: 2010 Revisited – Joseph Szymanski
  95. Best Pics 2010 on Flickr – Michael Rubin
  96. My 10 Best Shots of 2010 – ROBIN BLACK PHOTOGRAPHY – ROBIN BLACK
  97. Top 10 from 2010 – Anne McKinnell
  98. Vanilla Days – Best of 2010 – Pete Carr
  99. Top Photos of 2010 – Gary Crabbe / Enlightened Images ***
  100. Top Images from 2010 – Russ Bishop | Nature Photo Blog
  101. Favourite photos from 2010 – Bryn Tassell ***
  102. 10 Best Photos of 2010 by Scott Thompson – Scott Thompson
  103. My Top 10 photos of 2010 – Alexander S. Kunz ***
  104. My 10 Best for 2010 – Dan Baumbach ***
  105. Unified Photography – Best Photos of 2010 – Ken Snyder
  106. 5 From 2010 – Contemporary Wildlife Photography – David Lloyd
  107. Top 10 Photos of 2010 – Steven Bourelle Digital Arts
  108. 2010 Top Ten Photos – Andrew S Gibson
  109. 2010 Reflections – Dru Stefan Stone – Dru-Color My World
  110. Best of 2010 – Dave Hammaker
  111. Top 20 of 2010 – Jenna Stirling
  112. LandLopers.com Top Travel Photos of 2010 – Matt Long
  113. Best of 2010 – Stephen Davey
  114. Landscape Photography Blogger My Favorite Photos of 2010 – David Leland Hyde ***
  115. Views Infinitum – Best of 2010 – Scott Thomas
  116. One Per Trip – Favorite Travel Photos From 2010 - The Carey Adventures – PETER WEST CAREY
  117. Best of 2010I Love It, SF – Kara Murphy
  118. My top 10 pictures from 2010 – Duffy Knox
  119. Burrard-Lucas Photography – Will & Matt Burrard-Lucas ***
  120. Hank Christensen Photography Top 10 2010 – Hank Christensen
  121. My Best Photos from 2010 – 365-1/4 Sra
  122. Top Ten Images of 2010 – Michael Frye ***
  123. Jono Hey’s Best of 2010 on Flickr – JONO HEY
  124. My Favorite Photographs from 2010 – Stories From Home –David Patterson ***
  125. My 2010 Best Images of California and Arizona – Steve Sieren ***
  126. My Top 10 Landscapes of 2010 – Andre Leopold
  127. Best of 2010 set on Flickr – Erik Turner
  128. This was 2010 on Flickr – Jeffrey Van Daele
  129. Top 10 of 2010 – Brian Mangano
  130. Best Photos of 2010 - KBTImages – Kevin Thornhill
  131. Best Photos of 2010 – The Sun Shines & The Igloo Melts
  132. Top 10 of 2010 – Chad Griggs
  133. Best Photos of 2010 – WASEEF AKHTAR
  134. My Favorite Images from 2010 – Outdoor Exposure Photography by Sean Bagshaw – Sean Bagshaw ***
  135. My Best Shots of 2010 – Annika Ruohonen Photography – Annika Ruohonen
  136. Top sights from 2010 – Mariana Travieso Bassi
  137. Year 2010 in Korwel Photography – Iza Korwel
  138. WISCONSIN SUMMER – Jarrod Erbe
  139. Best Photos of 2010 – Jim Stamates
  140. Top 10 of 2010 – Younes Bounhar
  141. Light on the Landscape Photoblog/My Favorite Images of 2010 – WILLIAM NEILL ***
  142. My Best Photos of 2010 – Itsa a greyt day for a photo – Terri Jacobson
  143. Listening to Nature Photography Blog by Rhoda Maurer – RHODA MAURER ***
  144. My favorites of 2010 – David Richter
  145. Best of 2010 – View from the Little Red Tent – Edie Howe
  146. tmophoto best of 2010 – Thomas O’Brien
  147. Best Photos Of 2010 – Dawnstar Australis – Daniel McNamara
  148. Top 10 of 2010 - Cranial Aperture – Jeffrey Yen
  149. 10 Best Favorites of 2010 – Sudheendra Kadri ***
  150. Flickr – Best of 2010 – Chris Arts
  151. Flickr: Best of 2010 – Heidi Donat
  152. Best Photo of 2010 – Anton Huo
  153. Best of 2010 – Travel & Landscape – Eugene Cheng
  154. Preetalina Photography: 2010 Favorites – Preeti Desai
  155. Hidden Light Photography 2010 Favorites – Alan Williams
  156. 5Mae 2010 Favourites Flickr Set – Sarah-Mae
  157. Best Photos of 2010 – John Fujimagari ***
  158. Best of 2010 – Paavani Bishnoi
  159. Best Photos of 2010 - Phil Colla ***
  160. 100 Favorites from 2010 – Patrick J. Endres ***
  161. Top Ten Of 2010 – Steve Cole Photography
  162. Some of My Favorite Images From 2010 – Clark Crenshaw Photography***

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Haleakala Crater by Moonlight

Sometimes there is nothing better than rediscovering an old photo. I had this slide (yes slide) of Haleakala Crater in Haleakala National Park , Hawaii drum scanned back in 2004.  At the time I took this photo with Fuji Provia 400 film as it had great response for night photography and seemed to be the right fit for my effort to photograph the crater under a full moon. Note: Click below to see a larger version of the image.

Haleakala Crater by Moonlight - Haleakala National Park, Hawaii
Click to Enlarge

Haleakala Crater by Moonlight - Haleakala National Park, Hawaii

This spot is most notably photographed at sunrise and I highly recommend being there for that view at least once in your life. Its breathtaking, if the clouds cooperate. For myself I wanted to see this landscape (if even subtly) under moonlight. At an elevation over 10,000 feet you can see for dozens if not one hundred miles over the Pacific ocean and if you’re a stargazer you can see billions of stars in the sky above. For these  reasons this seemed to be the perfect place to be, to see land, sea and sky in layers of movement… each at their own pace. A volcano ever growing with clouds swirling about it over a vast ocean lit by an arcing moon destined to set as quickly as it arose. Haleakala crater is stunning & dynamic location that I can’t wait to revisit again.

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Pro Tips: Photo Editing with Gary Crabbe

An often overlooked skill that is essential for all photographers to learn is photo editing. While photographers focus squarely on technical discussions relating to in-camera capture or post-production, little attention is paid to the critical step of selecting the right photo(s) for presentation. One of the best methods to improve ones photo editing skills is to learn from an experienced photo editor. For that task I approached professional photographer and photo editor Gary Crabbe who was kind enough to share his knowledge on the subject.  Enjoy!

Background – As Described by Gary

I spent nearly a decade managing a niche stock agency for world-renowned photographer Galen Rowell. At the time of my departure in 1999, he had a library of nearly 400,000 images, none of which were in any kind of computer database, very few were scanned, there were no keywords, and no images save for his best 1000 had any kind of unique ID number. Still, I and my staff were called on a daily basis to cull through his collection and submit a selection of images for all kinds of client requests, from bunny rabbits, penguins, and polar bears, to hiking the Inca Trail or climbing in the Himalaya, or grand scenics of Yosemite and the High Sierra. We’d look though thousands of images to find just the right one to send to a client, that we felt would fill a particular need. I would often say, I could look over a full sheet of twenty images, and in less than a second know whether there were any images on that page that would even be worth a second look.

These days, in addition to my own freelance photography and book projects, I continue to offer private photo workshops, individual and company consultations regarding photo editing, portfolio development, and image library management.

Why is editing important?
Photography is a communication medium. Every shot is a story that we are trying to tell, to show and inform the viewer. Editing is how we clarify that story, or help it fit within a particular contextual expression. If you start typing random letters on a page, you get gibberish, something nobody can understand, and nobody will care about. If instead of letters you start typing random words, viewers will be able to recognize the words, but there will be no focus or understanding regarding what you are trying to tell them. Start assembling the words, and suddenly people start to more clearly understand what you are trying to explain to them. Give further thought and refinement to how you arrange those words, restructure the grammar to impart more drama into your story, and suddenly you have poetry, prose, or a gripping novel that captures peoples attention, and triggers an emotional connection between the reader (viewer) and the story you have crafted for them.

Editing Photos is no different from editing text. You start with the idea that you want to convey, and then you determine the best way to use and arrange all of the elements at your disposal to make your story as clear, and emotionally accessible as possible. Some of that editing takes place in the field while looking through the view finder, and the rest takes place while comparing shots after the fact.

As a photographer what does photo editing entail? Is there a best practice to follow?
Assuming for editing in this context, we’re referring to after capture editing.  Editing is the process by which we sift through our shots of a particular scene, and determine which image has the most dramatic impact, or clarity of subject or story. When taking that one second to review a page of 20 slides, there was always an image which stood out from the crowd, whose focus was so clear, and whose subject was so readily apparent, that there was no doubt within that one instance regarding what that image was about, or the story or emotion it was trying to convey.

Editing is subjective, and photographers are usually our own worst editors, since we’re emotionally invested in the images we make. We want to like everything we’ve taken, and we feel that everyone should respond to our images just the way we hoped or intended.

And in the real world… it doesn’t quite work that way. Editing is personal, and it’s brutally tough if you can be hard enough on yourself to try and view your work objectively and dispassionately. But as best practice, edit out anything out of focus right off the bat. Anything over or underexposed that’s not recoverable… goodbye. Once all the outtakes are moved aside, I generally recommend the half approach. For any scene, or bracketed series, or any number of images, do a first run through and mark any image you think is good. Let’s say out of 100 shots, mark 50. Then of those 50, half them again, down to 25, 12, then be as tough as nails, and try and weed it down to a top 10, or 8, 6, or even 1.

What pitfalls do most photographers often run into when attempting to
edit their work?

Many photographers, myself included have what I called the Magic File Drawer. (digital folder or file cabinet) That’s where you’d put all those over/under exposed or out of focus blurry images, and in a few years, you’d re-open the drawer, hoping against hope that those “gee-I’d-really-wished-that-came-out” image would suddenly emerge perfect and flawless. Learn to let go of those images. I know it’s tough, but it’s understandable given that we’re all so connected to our own images, yet it needs to be done. Next on the list is that most photographers see in the image exactly what they wanted to see, as if they had magic zoom lenses for eyeballs. Yet for all that they see in the image, they most often fail to miss the obvious distractions or compositional flaws that keep the viewer from seeing the story as clearly as the photographer. You need to look at your own images fresh, like you’ve never seen it before, and ask yourself, is this showing what I want to show in the best possible way. If not, is there something I can do to fix or clarify the scene / story.

What does a photographers final edit say about the photographer or their work (to those viewing the final selections)?
Simply put, the combined in-field and post capture editing communicate the strength, style, and potency of the photographers personal vision. The refined editing is what captures the viewers attention and says “Here I Am; Look at me!” The combination of vision and editing determine whether the viewer is going to be hit upside the head with a marshmallow or a mallet. The viewer instantly responds, “oh yeah, wow! I get it” or “um….ok; it’s nice, but I’m not really sure about….”.

Is there a favorite story of yours that you can share when photo editing made an impact in your professional career?
I can’t really think of any one instance that made an impact on my career, probably because I’ve been doing this now for nearly 20 years.

One of the cardinal rules of editing slides or images for clients was “Only give the client what they are asking for”, and don’t throw in totally irrelevant images just because you think it’s a nice image. Yet countless times, I’ve still thrown in an image or two to a submission that I knew wasn’t what the client was asking for, and they’d wind up picking that image. It just goes to prove that editing, like viewing images is a subjective art that defies hard and fast rules. But the bottom line is that it’s a learned talent that takes practice. Listen to your inner critic, yet feel free to follow what your gut says. Sometimes I really love an image, and yet no one else seems to get it, and other times I’ve shot an image that I think is OK, but nothing special, and when I post it to an online photo forum I get raves and comments like “one of the best I’ve ever seen from you”

The one thing I like to leave my consulting and workshop clients with is the saying that people will judge you by your weakest image.  Strive always to show your best, or at least find out what you could do to make an image better. Editing is about making your story clearer and your image(s) stronger. Go into that back room closet, or down to the goodwill store, get yourself a nice coat of armored skin, and think “Slash & burn”. The tougher you get, the stronger vision you’ll portray, and viewers will respond.

Sites to See Gary Crabbe’s Photography and Writing

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